T
Timothy17
Guest
Charging interest on loans is totally kosher with the Catholic Church, according to my RCIA instructor.
Someone want to explain to me at what point the Church stopped protesting charging people interest? I know (everyone does) that in the Middle Ages this was known as “usury” and forbidden. When did the Church officially recant this? And don’t just cite Vatican II or a Pope, actually link a document and the paragraph.
We rightfully protest abortion, for example, but we ignore the systematic and merciless plundering of entire nations, peoples and families on a global scale. Interest is the business of misers and the consequence is economic misery - why doesn’t the Church protest and condemn this? Maybe poor people and people who have a genuine interest about social justice might just take a second look at the Church if they saw that some of our teachings/rules weren’t just about sexual behaviour but also about defending and protecting the poor.
Honestly, have we just lost our nerve or are we simply too afraid to rock the establishment or is it more likely that too many Catholics are betrothed to loans to dare speak against the practice?
Recently it was my Aunt’s 50th birthday celebration, and they showed a slideshow and quoted some interesting statistics. One was the average salary a person made in 1960: $5,300.00, and the other was the average price of a house, $12,700.00. Someone could actually save their money for a few years and straight-up and outright buy their house, with the help of parents. Now, people need 25-40 year loans to afford one.
Why doesn’t the Church call a spade a spade and protest usury and an economic system based upon it?
Someone want to explain to me at what point the Church stopped protesting charging people interest? I know (everyone does) that in the Middle Ages this was known as “usury” and forbidden. When did the Church officially recant this? And don’t just cite Vatican II or a Pope, actually link a document and the paragraph.
We rightfully protest abortion, for example, but we ignore the systematic and merciless plundering of entire nations, peoples and families on a global scale. Interest is the business of misers and the consequence is economic misery - why doesn’t the Church protest and condemn this? Maybe poor people and people who have a genuine interest about social justice might just take a second look at the Church if they saw that some of our teachings/rules weren’t just about sexual behaviour but also about defending and protecting the poor.
Honestly, have we just lost our nerve or are we simply too afraid to rock the establishment or is it more likely that too many Catholics are betrothed to loans to dare speak against the practice?
Recently it was my Aunt’s 50th birthday celebration, and they showed a slideshow and quoted some interesting statistics. One was the average salary a person made in 1960: $5,300.00, and the other was the average price of a house, $12,700.00. Someone could actually save their money for a few years and straight-up and outright buy their house, with the help of parents. Now, people need 25-40 year loans to afford one.
Why doesn’t the Church call a spade a spade and protest usury and an economic system based upon it?